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Today it's been 'We're In The Money', not because my circumstances reflect that but because of a vinyl LP I had on in the shop of Hollywood musical stuff. It wasn't too controversial or heavy but when Shazia took over she put on Ultravox. I wasn't into feeling awfully old today. It's funny how I can listen to Tallis and Monteverdi - even Vera Lynn and not feel old, but Oasis, Ebenezer Goode, Madonna, Soft Cell etc. really make me feel every single year of forty five. Probably why I don't listen to it.

Chas and Dave doing a wartime singalong is an over the hill-ness inducement - but the original versions from the 40s have no effect.

Aah yes, Carl Malcolm. I had that song as part of childhood harrassment rituals at infants school because I was, erm 'unthin' (and have struggled with my weight ever since). Puppy fat I believe they call it.

En route to keep fit I had a great spring in my step as 'Soapy Crow' was one of the tunes I put on my MP3 player. It's a jazz piece by Norwegian trombonist Frode Thingnaes and it includes a cracking 2 1/2 minute trombone solo but it has been relegated to a piece of library music. I have it on one of my 1980s Channel 4 test card compilations. It must be somewhere on Youtube. Yes, here it is:

A 'Cardiff Bus' song was released using the tune of the LH theme tune, telling us of places served by the Cardiff Bus network. A video was released and posted on YT but I see it has been taken down. It seems the lawsuit-happy Americans don't see it and have demanded it be taken down due to copyright infringement (otherwise they'll launch an air strike on the Principality).

Anyway, to the 'maybe tomorrow I want to settle down' it went something like Maindy Tremorfa Pontcanna Adamsdown, this Cardiff Bus is a-taking us to town. Rather clever I thought.

I had that cheery William Walton tune on the brain today after it was on the wireless, from his Facade suite that Previn played and Eric and Ernie danced along to at the tail end of their famous Christmas show sketch.

Back to title of thread. 'Ride Like The Wind' by Christopher Cross, after hearing it playing as a piece of supermarket muzak. After hearing some wonderful Frederick Austerlitz classics I had on in the shop yesterdee.

Bowls is on the telly now which my wife loves. I've found myself remarking to her that red one might just make it to jack high, or that the green player might kill the end. The audience look like the darby and joan world jamboree, or the 1985 Conservative Party conference. How WOULD 'Charlie Hebdo' satirise this??

Which leads me onto today's tune, The Cheeky Girls' 'Touch My Bum'. A Keep Fit classic. We are the Cheeky Girls. You are the Cheeky Boys.....

Just bought E's birthday present - a polyphon with discs. Told him it was a CD player...which it is, after a fashion. Consequently I have a Victorian/Edwardian song called 'The Blue Bells'going round my brain.

dave brum wrote:Hello Nutty, nice to see you on here again. Sounds like Nutty Junior is doing well with her piano lessons, what grade is she on now??

Hello DB! Junior got stalled a bit with us moving house/schools etc but she's right back on target now and booked in for grade 3 this spring, we haven't been given the actual date yet. I can't keep up with her so I'm back on the violin and loving it whilst helping her learn the theory stuff.

That always reminds me of the bit in the Dads Army film where the Nazi paratroopers attempt to take a church full of people hostage, with Mainwaring's men dressed as choristers. Wilson stand behind him and I shall ....... and (Jones) I shall get my bayonet and shove it up his.....

I wish Google could recognise musical pitch as it does the human voice. There's this tune that was going the rounds in the 70s, it may have charted and I hear it from time to time. It sounds like the Average White or Climax Blues band funky white Philly soul sort of thing and I've even heard it on a Marmite advert. There is this catchy riff in there that goes: (all staccato except for the final 2 notes)

dave brum wrote:I wish Google could recognise musical pitch as it does the human voice. There's this tune that was going the rounds in the 70s, it may have charted and I hear it from time to time. It sounds like the Average White or Climax Blues band funky white Philly soul sort of thing and I've even heard it on a Marmite advert. There is this catchy riff in there that goes: (all staccato except for the final 2 notes)

I also heard the War song on BRMB on a Saturday afternoon but not in complete form. George Gavin would always play about ten seconds of a song then cut straight to a football commentary when a goal was scored then go straight back to the song. This was back in the days of needle time so it must have cost the IBA a fortune for nothing. And after the days of Tony Butler, whom Jasper Carrott famously made a sketch about. The West Midlands is the home of naff radio , Les Ross, Gordon Astley, Tony Butler, Ed Doolan. If you wake up feeling ghastly, tune to Gordon Astley (on what was Beacon Radio). Going down to London and listening to Capital was such a refreshing change for me in the 80s!

Hey Manhattan! by Prefab Sprout, another good band from way back when, that disappeared into thin air and never were heard again.

And Yuri's Hair Salon by Len Liggins from an old John Peel session. Yuri was 'hair today, gone tomorrow' with his 'parting' being such sweet sorrow, according to the song. It told the tale of a Russian barber in Brixton who had been there for 30 years and was evicted. If my memory serves me well, Liggins was a member of a Loiner band called The Wedding Present.

'There's No Other Way' by Blur. Just because I went into town earlier today for a look at all the building and construction work going on at the moment (it's like a brand new Second City is being built!) and because of some longstanding roadworks I told my wife I had to get an earlier bus to her place of work from town. 'There's no other way' she said, so began the earworm.

Hallway in postwar local authority homes like mine are only one square metre so that's a nono. I have my YDP131 in the front bedroom as the one available corner in the lounge has a radiator in it plus a cat lavatory, scratching post and nest of tables on it. Badly planned but my wife would not have it any other way!

Used to love that on a Sunday night with lousy old school the next day. Usually followed by 'Shoestring' which has yet another memorable theme tune. Trevor Eve was in that, who is a Brummie but 'put on' a West Country accent for that show. Pat Roach did likewise in 'Auf Wiedersehen Pet' (Bomber).

I had a teacher called Miss Carter (her first name was Julie and she played the piano!) who had a genuine Gloucestershire accent so I could tell even at that age they were both fakes.

Today it's the 'Jarrow Song' by Alan Price, as some very helpful Geordie boys are sorting me out with some roof tiles. Oh and the wee-wee song also, otherwise known as Fog on the Tyne. Very odd as Middlesborough is nowhere near the bleeding Tyne.....